The facts and considerations we have had before us are, I think, sufficient to justify the definitive rejection of the first hypothesis in all its forms; for, on the one hand, we have seen that no disorder of the systemic functions or of the nervous centres... The Dublin Journal of Medical Science - Page 1061878Full view - About this book
| Family medicine - 1876 - 530 pages
...whatever. At bottom we are all humoralists, and believe in infection. It is not until we have to say where and how the infection acts that questions arise. The...spinal cord. We are therefore at liberty to adopt the tissue-origin of fever as the basis on which we hope eventually to construct an explanation of the... | |
| 1879 - 852 pages
...which preside over them, is capable of inducing a state which can be identified with febrile pvre.ua; and, on the other, that it is possible for such a...spinal cord. We are, therefore, at liberty to adopt the tissue-origin of fever as the basis on which we hope eventually to construct an explanation of the... | |
| 1880 - 460 pages
...from first to last a disorder of the protoplasm, and that all the systemic disturbances are secondary. The facts and considerations we have had before us...spinal cord. We are, therefore, at liberty to adopt the tissue-origin of fever as the basis on which we hope eventually to construct an explanation of the... | |
| Medicine - 1877 - 720 pages
...inducing a state which can be identified with febrile pyrexia ; and, on the other, that it ispossible for such a state to originate and persist in the organism...after the influence of the central nervous system has beeta 254 MrtluJ Tlaei u< Quette. March 10, 18TT. 255 withdrawn from the tissues by the severance of... | |
| Sir Donald MacAlister - 1887 - 60 pages
...first to last a disorder of protoplasm, and that all the systemic disturbances are secondary. . . . The facts and considerations we have had before us...eventually to construct an explanation of the process. But if we attempt to do so now, we shall at once find ourselves in face of an unsolved physiological... | |
| Medicine - 1876 - 412 pages
...on the one hand, we have seen that no disorder of the systemic functions, or of the nervous centers which preside over them, is capable of inducing a...spinal cord. We are, therefore, at liberty to adopt the tissue-origin of fever as the basis on which we hope eventually to construct an explanation of the... | |
| J. C. Burnett - Drug treatment - 2003 - 60 pages
...from first to last a disorder of the protoplasm, and that all the systemic disturbances are secondary. The facts and considerations we have had before us...spinal cord. We are, therefore, at liberty to adopt the tissueorigin of fever as the basisi on which we hope eventually to construct an explanation of the... | |
| William Braithwaite, James Braithwaite, Edmond Fauriel Trevelyan - Medicine - 1879 - 594 pages
...protoplasm, and that all the systemic disturbances are secondary. " In both hypotheses it is tactily assumed that fever is the product of a material fever-producing...tissue origin of fever as the basis on which we hope ecentually to construct an explanation of the process." As variations in temperature in fever seem... | |
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